That night, while the banda music shook the walls of my villa, I sat on the cheap folding bed in the shed and made several calls.
The first was to my lawyer. The second was to the property management company. The third was to the security company that installed the smart home system.
By 6 a.m. the next morning, everything changed.
At exactly 7:00, all the electricity in the house was cut off. At 7:05, the water supply stopped. At 7:10, the main gate locked automatically and could no longer be opened from inside.
Screams and banging started immediately.
I walked out of the shed in the same clothes I had worn the night before, looking calm and rested. Diego ran toward me in his pajamas, furious.
“What the fuck did you do, Mariana?!”
I held up my phone and showed him the ownership documents.
“This villa was never yours, Diego. It was never your mother’s. I paid for it in cash, before we got married, and the deed is solely in my name. The cars in the garage? Also mine. The furniture? Mine. Even the Wi-Fi you’ve been using — mine.”
Doña Teresa appeared behind him, hair messy, face red with anger. “You can’t do this! This is my son’s house!”
“No, Teresa. This is my house. And from today, none of you are welcome here.”
I pressed a button on my phone. The front gate opened slowly.
Security guards I had called earlier walked in.
“You have one hour to remove all your things and your family. Anything left behind after that will be donated.”